For Auld Lang Syne | Page 4

Ray Woodward
our actual friends that we may go out and meet their ideal cousins!
--Thoreau.

I must feel pride in my friend's accomplishments as if they were mine--wild, delicate, throbbing property in his virtues. I feel as warmly when he is praised as the lover when he hears applause of his engaged maiden.
--Emerson.

In very many cases of friendship, or what passes for it, the old axiom is reversed, and like clings to unlike more than to like.
--Dickens.

Hearts are linked to hearts by God. The friend on whose fidelity you can count, whose success in life flushes your cheek with honest satisfaction, whose triumphant career you have traced and read with a heart throbbing almost as if it were a thing alive, for whose honor you would answer as for your own; that friend, given to you by circumstances over which you have no control, was God's own gift.
--Robertson.

If thou neglect thy love to thy neighbor, in vain thou professest thy love to God.
--Quarles.

I cannot contentedly frame a prayer for myself in particular, without a catalogue for my friends; nor request a happiness, wherein my sociable disposition doth not desire the fellowship of my neighbor.
--Browne.

It's an owercome sooth for age an' youth?And it brooks wi' nae denial,?That the dearest friends are the auldest friends?And the young are just on trial.
There's a rival bauld wi' young an' auld?And it's him that has bereft me;?For the surest friends are the auldest friends?And the maist o' mine hae left me.
There are kind hearts still, for friends to fill?And fools to take and break them;?But the nearest friends are the auldest friends?And the grave's the place to seek them.
--Stevenson.

God divided man into men that they might help each other.
--Seneca.

I sometimes hear my friends complain finely that I do not appreciate their fineness. I shall not tell them whether I do or not. As if they expected a vote of thanks for every fine thing which they uttered or did! Who knows but it was finely appreciated? It may be that your silence was the finer thing of the two.... In human intercourse the tragedy begins, not when there is misunderstanding about words, but when silence is not understood. Then there can never be an explanation.
--Thoreau.

It is a friendly heart that has plenty of friends.
--Thackeray.

It is not becoming to turn from friends in adversity, but then it is for those who have basked in the sunshine of their prosperity to adhere to them. No one was ever so foolish as to select the unfortunate for their friends.
--Lucanus.

It is essential to friendship that there be no labor to pass for more than we are, no effort, no anxiety to hide! If anything be concealed, the constant intercourse of friends will discover it, and one discovery will produce others. The idea that the heart has one secret fold extinguishes affection.
--Channing.

Impatient and uncertain lovers think that they must say or do something kind whenever they meet; they must never be cold. But they who are friends do not do what they think they must, but what they must. Even their friendship is, in one sense, a sublime phenomenon to them.
--Thoreau.

It is a good and safe rule to sojourn in many places, as if you meant to spend your life there, never omitting an opportunity of doing a kindness or speaking a true word or making a friend.
--Ruskin.

It has seemed to me lately more possible than I knew, to carry a friendship greatly, on one side, without due correspondence on the other. Why should I cumber myself with the poor fact that the receiver is not capacious? It never troubles the sun that some of his rays fall wide and vain into ungrateful space, and only a small part on the reflecting planet.... It is thought a disgrace to love unrequited. But the great will see that true love cannot be unrequited.
--Emerson.

In the cause of friendship brave all dangers.
--Dickens.

Kindness given and received aright and knitting two hearts into one is a thing of heaven, as rare in this world as a perfect love; both are the overflow of only very rare and beautiful souls.
--Balzac.

Kindred passions and pursuits are the natural groundwork of friendship. Real friendship is of slow growth, and never thrives, unless ingrafted upon a stock of known and reciprocal merit.
--Chesterfield.

Let this, therefore, be established as a primary law concerning friendship, that we expect from our friends only what is honorable, and for our friends' sake do what is honorable; that we should not wait till we are asked; that zeal be ever ready, and reluctance far from us.
--Cicero.

Let Friendship's accents cheer our doubtful way,?And Love's pure planet lend its guiding ray,--?Our tardy Art shall wear an angel's wings,?And life shall lengthen with the joy it brings!
--Holmes.

I am not of that feather, to shake off my friend when most he needs me.
--Shakespeare.

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